Pest control methods fall into a few categories:
Effective pest control management is essential for maintaining a healthy environment.
- Physical pest control, such as traps and barriers
- Chemical pest control, such as pesticides and rodenticides
- Biological pest control, such as predatory and parasitic insects
Integrated pest control management, or IPM, combines elements of all three to holistically manage pests across an ecosystem. For instance, a homeowner practices IPM when they release ladybugs, spray neem oil, and plant marigolds to manage garden pests.
Staying current with these pest control methods sets your business up for success. The more pest control methods you have to choose among, the more personalized and effective solution you can deliver each customer.
Implementing integrated pest control management is crucial for sustainable pest solutions.
Regular assessments are vital for effective pest control management to adapt strategies as needed.
Physical Pest Control
Utilizing pest control management techniques can significantly reduce pest-related issues.
Incorporating pest control management strategies ensures a proactive approach to pest prevention.
Understanding the importance of pest control management allows businesses to offer more effective solutions.
Effective pest control management requires a combination of different techniques for optimal results.
Physical pest control methods comprise a wide range of options. Some are common sense, such as sealing cracks and setting traps.
But others are unexpected, like the way some pest control pros swear by using a vacuum cleaner. Knowing what to use and when goes a long way toward improving your field service operations.
Barriers and Exclusion Methods
Barriers and other exclusion methods create a boundary pests can’t or won’t cross. For example, a window screen creates a physical boundary that keeps bugs out while air still flows through. A barrier spray, by comparison, creates a chemical boundary that repels insects from a home’s foundation.
Barriers and exclusion methods are most effective with pests that take predictable paths. Take rodents and roaches, who’ll squeeze beneath doorways to gain entry to homes. A simple door sweep seals that space, keeping both pests outside.
Once you know pests’ preferred routes to block off, you can work backward to put more pressure on them. If you find out the roaches are coming from an infestation under the sidewalk, you can position bait stations to hit the roaches closer to home.
Traps and Capture Devices
Traps and capture devices eliminate pests by ensnaring or deceiving them. As Saturday Night Live showed in its spoof ad for Bug Off, there’s a certain kind of satisfaction that comes from catching pests with a trap. Common examples of trap and capture devices include:
- Glue boards for catching mice and crawling insects
- Dishes of beer for trapping and drowning garden pests like slugs
- Refillable bait stations for trapping rats
Traps capture a pest by using something against it, such as luring it with a piece of food or snaring it along its regular route. That means, like with barriers and exclusion methods, traps are most useful when you can predict how a pest population moves – or at least its general whereabouts – so you can catch its attention with some bait.
Mechanical Removal Techniques
By focusing on pest control management, you can enhance the overall effectiveness of your pest control services.
Mechanical techniques directly kill or remove a pest without the use of chemical or biological agents. That efficiency, combined with the reality that mechanical techniques usually best fit small-scale jobs, makes mechanical pest removal appeal to homeowners.
Mechanical techniques can be as simple as picking beetles off plants, scraping aphids off flowers, or tilling the soil to bring grubs to the surface. That manual labor doesn’t appeal to everyone, but there’s an upside to it. Mechanical techniques create minimal impact on the surrounding environment, something that’s important to eco-conscious customers.
Mechanical techniques overlap with other forms of pest control, too. A classic example is the mousetrap.
Vacuuming and Suction Methods
A vacuum is a powerful pest control tool. Vacuums inhale large amounts of bugs, able to greatly reduce insect infestations such as bed bugs, cockroaches, and termites. But in the hands of an experienced exterminator, a vacuum also:
- Removes droppings and shell bits so they don’t cause a health hazard
- Captures insects for identification with the help of special attachments
- Handles bugs that can’t or shouldn’t be handled, like stink bugs
Vacuums and suction tools work best in a support role, making them great for an integrated pest management plan. For instance, vacuuming crevices does more than pull insects from hard-to-reach places. It also reduces how much insecticide you need to use because there’s less dust and lint in the way. And because the vacuum pulls up bits of food, insects have an even harder time surviving.
Pick a HEPA (high efficiency particulate air) unit, which will minimize how much dust you stir. The HEPA filter will capture tiny airborne allergens, leaving you and your customers confident in a cleaner home.
Biological Pest Control
Biological pest control leverages nature’s help to manage pests. This can be as straightforward as releasing ladybugs to eat aphids. But it can also mean reinforcing biological mechanisms already in place, such as increasing nematode numbers.
A well-planned pest control management approach can lead to long-term pest reduction.
Biological pest control methods get more complex, too, with microbe-based solutions engineered from bacteria.
Predatory Insects and Invertebrates
Predatory insects and invertebrates turn the predator-prey relationship in your favor. These beneficial organisms are natural enemies of unwanted pests, like a dog or cat ready to go after a mouse. Some examples of predatory insects include:
- Certain types of beetles that eat termites
- Predatory mites that feed on spider mites
- Green lacewing larvae that eat aphids and thrips
Predatory insects and invertebrates are great at what they do, but they have limitations. To start, some customers won’t be comfortable with the idea, particularly if they fear it’ll mean more bugs coming into their homes. Also, some predators have narrow feeding habits while others are more general, eating beneficial insects and unwanted bugs alike.
Keep in mind, too, that customers may call about an insect that’s already performing predatory pest control. A few house centipede or spider sightings could mean the insects are snacking on roaches or silverfish somewhere in the house.
Parasitoids and Parasitic Nematodes
Only around 10% of insects are parasitoids, many of them flies and wasps. But they play a big role in the natural world. Whereas a parasite must find a host to which to attach, parasitoids begin life attached to another insect, usually as eggs deposited in the host’s body.
Pest Control Management Strategies
Parasitic nematodes work similarly and offer more as a biological pest control method. Nematodes are microscopic worms found in the soil. Some species are helpful, others harmful. Helpful varieties, such as the roach-eating nematode Steinernema carpocapsae, feed by injecting their prey with a toxic bacteria that breaks insects down into a meal.
Because they’re microscopic, nematodes can be sprayed by the millions. You can cover a lot of ground quickly to target fleas, grubs, gnats, and more. Just be sure you’re applying the right species, as the wrong species of nematode can be destructive.
Utilizing biological methods as part of pest control management can yield environmentally friendly results.
Effective pest control management strategies involve a balance of various approaches to pest control.
Note nematodes are living organisms. They don’t have a long shelf life, and they have to be applied in the right conditions. Soil should be moist and aerated, and spray should be applied in the evening or morning when temperatures are cooler and sunlight is lower. Also note that nematodes take time to work and may require repeat applications.
Implementing rigorous pest control management protocols will boost your service reliability and customer satisfaction.
Microbial Control Agents
Microbial pest control harnesses microorganisms and pathogens – bacteria, viruses, fungi – as a means to suppress insect populations. The microbe is engineered into a biological pesticide that’s applied to the soil. Insects ingest the pesticide, introducing a microbe that kills from the inside out.
Bacillus thuringiensis, or Bt, is one of the more well-known types of microbial control agents. Found in more than 130 pesticide products, this naturally occurring soil bacteria has been developed into strains that target specific insects such as beetles, flies, and mosquitoes.
Microbial control agents have a significant role in sustainable pest control management practices.
With a focus on pest control management, you can enhance the efficiency of your pest control services.
Microbial solutions are an integral part of effective pest control management strategies.
Microbial pesticides are a smart choice for eco-friendly pest control. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) notes their advantages, from low toxicity to people and animals to high effectiveness in low doses.
Leveraging technology within pest control management can enhance treatment outcomes and efficiency.
Still, there are some drawbacks. Like with nematodes, microbial control agents are less shelf-stable than conventional pesticides. And though microbial solutions’ narrow host range makes them safer, it may also mean you need a wide variety to be prepared.
Chemical Pest Control
Chemical pesticides are powerful against all kinds of common pests – so powerful they must be used responsibly. More and more, that means combining pesticides with other methods as part of an integrated pest control plan. That way, you get maximum effect from a minimal dose of pesticide.
Understand the significance of integrated pest control management to optimize your pest management approach.
Understanding the roles of chemical and biological means is essential in pest control management.
When considering a pesticide, start by reading the label closely. The product should be something you feel safe handling and recommending to customers. Make sure you’re confident following the instructions and application techniques.
Also ask yourself how well the new pesticide would fit into your service routine. By making sure you feel comfortable at all stages of using the pesticide, it’s more likely you’ll keep customers, their children, and pets safe.
Types of Chemical Pest Control Methods
Factors influencing effective pest control management include environmental considerations and safety protocols.
Pesticides break down into three main types of chemical pest control:
Developing a thorough pest control management plan is essential for any pest control service provider.
Effective communication with clients about pest control management strategies fosters trust and transparency.
- Insecticides are chemicals that target insects. Some kill insects instantly or over time. Other insecticides act in different ways, such as insect growth regulators (IGRs) that disrupt insect life cycles.
- Rodenticides are chemicals made for killing rodents, such as rat poison. Rodenticides are harmful and even fatal to more than rodents, including pets.
- Herbicides are considered pesticide because weeds are considered pests. Considering Americans average about 3.4 hours per week and $55 per month on their lawns, weeds are definitely pests.
The growing demand for insecticide reinforces the importance of using it responsibly. The global insecticides market is on pace to reach $22 billion by 2030.
Factors When Selecting Chemical Pest Control Methods
When researching new pesticides to potentially use, several outside factors should be taken into consideration, too:
- Safety precautions: Do you have all the personal protective equipment (PPE) required? Do you have the proper ventilation and equipment to mix and apply the pesticide? Making sure you can meet the product's safety standards minimizes chance of exposure.
- Environmental impact: Can you safely store unused product so there’s no risk of contamination? Can you safely dispose of used product? Do you have the ability to clean your tools immediately and keep service clothes separate from other laundry? Proper handling protects you and the environment from improper pesticide exposure.
- Regulatory considerations: Pesticide use must comply with both state and federal regulations. The National Pesticide Information Center (NPIC) offers a directory to each state’s regulatory agency. It also lets you search by pesticide or ingredient.
Though it takes time to properly vet a pesticide, doing so protects human, animal, and plant life from potential great harm. The desire to responsibly use all pest control methods, not just pesticides, is a driving force behind the demand for integrated pest management.
Choosing the right pesticide is a critical element of comprehensive pest control management.